Q: You must choose a city for a new Formula One street circuit – which city, anywhere in the world, do you choose, and why?

-It’s tough between New York, Moscow, Rome and Paris for. I have no idea how layouts would work at any of them but just because I love this city I would choose Rome.

Q: If you could choose one former world champion as your team mate, who would you choose and why?

– Alonso. He’s the best in my opinion and his personality fascinates me. I’d love to see who he really is and watch him every weekend in his element. I’d probably be too busy watching him to actually do my own job though.

Q: Formula One innovations of the past – ground effect, active suspension, turbocharging, six wheels, the list goes on. If you could bring back one past innovation, what would it be and why?

-. Honestly, I’d just like bigger engines again -more power less grip is how it should be but that’s not really an innovation. Probably ground effects then. I’m not really looking forward to turbos coming back.

Q: What innovations would you like to see in the future?

– F1 was supposed to have ground effects but then that idea got crunched up and thrown in the bin. I’m not really sure. I’m ambivalent towards turbos but at least it’ll be interesting and might shake up the teams a bit.

Q: You can only drive at one circuit for the rest of your life – which circuit, past or present from anywhere in the world, do you choose?

Q: Maserati, Alfa Romeo, Tyrrell, March are just some of the teams that have departed the sport. Which former team would you most liked to have raced with and why?

– Alfa Romeo because it’s Alfa Romeo! If Alfa came back they’d be the only team on earth that might be able to sway me from being a Ferrari fan.

Q: You have to design a new F1 circuit, combining all your favourite corners from other tracks around the world. Which three corners are top of your list and why?

– Ascari because it is simply brilliant, Parabolica because I always find it a nightmare and turn 8 for G-forces.

Q: You can travel back in time and compete in any decade of Formula One racing, from the 1950s to the 1990s. Which decade would you choose and why?

– 80s. Just because Gilles raced then and then after his death I could occupy myself watching some of the great names rising up.

Q: If you could pick two Formula One greats of the past (from different eras) to watch race against each other, who would you pick?

– Gilles Villeneuve and Jean Alesi.

Q: If you were a team boss, which current driver would you pick first for your team (excluding yourself and your current team mate)?

– Fernando Alonso.

Q: Just 19 of the world’s motor racing circuits feature on the current F1 calendar. You can add one more. Which circuit do you pick and why?

– Imola. There are a load of great tracks and countries which I wish were on the calendar but I loved watching Imola. I know it’s a load of chicanes today but it can still provide excellent racing and I think it’s a good track to hustle a car around.

Q: You are having a dinner party and can invite four people from the world of motorsport, past or present. Who do you invite?

– Alonso, Massa (I think Smedley should automatically have to come with Felipe but not count as a person as these two are joined at the hip:P), Gilles Villeneuve and Alesi.

Q: You are given the chance to drive any legendary Formula One car of the past (excluding those made by your own team). Which car would you choose?

– Ferrari 158. Surtees raced it and it was the most beautiful Ferrari ever. I nearly chose the F2002 though.

Q: Rooftop swimming pool, bowling alley, revolving sushi bar – just some of the features most F1 motorhomes don’t possess. If you could add one thing to your team’s motorhome, what would it be?

– a whacky warehouse.

Q: Imagine you have just won the world title. Where would you go for your celebratory meal and what would choose from the menu?

Q: You must choose a city for a new Formula One street circuit – which city, anywhere in the world, do you choose, and why?

I’d love to see a Grand Prix in Hong Kong. Having visited there myself, it’s a wonderful, vibrant, exciting metropolis of a city with towering buildings, a beautiful harbour and a fantastic mixture of cultures. Gran Turismo 4 had a fictional but plausible track around the city area across the harbour including a long back straight up along one of the main shopping streets. It was one of my favourite street tracks so I’d love to see a race in a similar setting one day, especially at dusk.

Q: If you could choose one former world champion as your team mate, who would you choose and why?

Sir Jackie Stewart. You could tell that he truly cared about all of his team mates and had an especially strong personal relationship with the late Francois Cevert. I think that as a triple World Champion he’d have been a fantastic driver to race alongside and to have as a mentor.

Q: Formula One innovations of the past – ground effect, active suspension, turbocharging, six wheels, the list goes on. If you could bring back one past innovation, what would it be and why?

Probably ground effect. The way those initial ground effect cars utterly blew the competition and from the fictional X2010 project that was born out of the partnership between Adrian Newey, Red Bull and Polyphony Digital has me salivating at the prospect of how quickly the cars would lap if they were able to exploit that phenomenon today.

Q: What innovations would you like to see in the future?

I’d like to see more innovation and development in the area of renewable energy in Formula 1. KERS has been a great addition to the Formula and is a great initial step, but I’d really like to see what could come out of Formula 1 designers and technicians truly sinking their teeth into electric or maybe ever hydrogen fuel cell technologies.

Q: You can only drive at one circuit for the rest of your life – which circuit, past or present from anywhere in the world, do you choose?

Silverstone. Fast, flowing, drenched in history, drenched in rain most of the time. Will always have a special place in my heart as the circuit where I saw my first Grand Prix and many others after that.

Q: Maserati, Alfa Romeo, Tyrrell, March are just some of the teams that have departed the sport. Which former team would you most liked to have raced with and why?

Jordan. Partly because Eddie Jordan is a personal hero of mine but because I always had a soft spot for the team during their existence as EJ’s team. I loved how they were more ‘fun’ than most other teams. I loved how they were the underdogs, a true independent honest privateer team that took on the big boys and occasionally beat them fair and square. I also believe that the old yellow ‘viper’ and ‘hornets’ Jordan liveries were the best of their era. I’d have loved to have debuted for Jordan to start my F1 career.

Q: You have to design a new F1 circuit, combining all your favourite corners from other tracks around the world. Which three corners are top of your list and why?

3) The Chase, Bathurst – insanely fast, flat-out kink immediately into a heavy braking zone. Takes balls in a V8 Supercar, will need something even more in an F1 car.

Q: You can travel back in time and compete in any decade of Formula One racing, from the 1950s to the 1990s. Which decade would you choose and why?

1960s. Mainly because of my experience driving those cars, albeit virtually, on Grand Prix Legends. Trail braking, four tyre drifts, incredible (but dangerous) circuits and some of the greatest names in the sport’s history – Clark, Hill, Brabham. So the 60s would be my choice.

Q: If you could pick two Formula One greats of the past (from different eras) to watch race against each other, who would you pick?

Ayrton Senna and Jim Clark. The two most respected racers in the sports history amongst their peers. Two God-tier drivers with other-worldly abilities. It would be THE ultimate.

Q: If you were a team boss, which current driver would you pick first for your team (excluding yourself and your current team mate)?

Lewis Hamilton. Yes, he’s made a few mistakes recently, but I don’t think he’s any less of a driver than he’s ever been at any point of his F1 career. There are races Hamilton wins and moves he is capable of pulling off that simply no other driver on the grid can do.

Q: Just 19 of the world’s motor racing circuits feature on the current F1 calendar. You can add one more. Which circuit do you pick and why?

Bathurst. Yes, I know it wouldn’t be allowed but as far as racing circuits go, this one is a behemoth. Huge, fast, massive elevation changes and one hell of a challenge.

Q: You are having a dinner party and can invite four people from the world of motorsport, past or present. Who do you invite?

Eddie Jordan.

Murray Walker.

Sir Stirling Moss.

Bernie Ecclestone.

Q: You are given the chance to drive any legendary Formula One car of the past (excluding those made by your own team). Which car would you choose?

The Lotus 49 from 1967.

Q: Rooftop swimming pool, bowling alley, revolving sushi bar – just some of the features most F1 motorhomes don’t possess. If you could add one thing to your team’s motorhome, what would it be?

A giant bouncy castle.

Q: Imagine you have just won the world title. Where would you go for your celebratory meal and what would choose from the menu?

Burger King. I’d probably order three Ultimate Super Mega Xtreme Whoppers with extra bacon and cheese and wolf it all down with a nice glass of Moet.

Q: You must choose a city for a new Formula One street circuit – which city, anywhere in the world, do you choose, and why?

I’m with Kamui! Tokyo would be amazing.

Q: If you could choose one former world champion as your team mate, who would you choose and why?

Jim Clark, because apparently he was a very nice chap.

Q: Formula One innovations of the past – ground effect, active suspension, turbocharging, six wheels, the list goes on. If you could bring back one past innovation, what would it be and why?

V10s. Because they make every hair on my body stand on end and on the rare occasion, bring a tear to my eye.

Q: What innovations would you like to see in the future?

Nothing. Don’t change a thing.

Q: You can only drive at one circuit for the rest of your life – which circuit, past or present from anywhere in the world, do you choose?

Probably Albert Park. I spent over 24 hours on the time-trial mode in F1 2010 trying to break into the top 100. And I’ve just been playing on F1 2011, and I’m currently 19th in the world! :D It’s the only track I don’t get bored of. I’m addicted to it, you could say!

Q: Maserati, Alfa Romeo, Tyrrell, March are just some of the teams that have departed the sport. Which former team would you most liked to have raced with and why?

Probably Brabham, because I’m Australian and it would be pretty cool.

Q: You have to design a new F1 circuit, combining all your favourite corners from other tracks around the world. Which three corners are top of your list and why?

Turn 11/12 chicane in Melbourne, Pouhon, and Massanet. All massively frustrating in video games, but epic to see drivers negotiating in the real.

Q: You can travel back in time and compete in any decade of Formula One racing, from the 1950s to the 1990s. Which decade would you choose and why?

1990s. Because the cars looked and sounded their best, and whilst the racing wasn’t always amazing, you always had the awesome aspect of the sport to fall back on when the overtaking was lacking.

Q: If you could pick two Formula One greats of the past (from different eras) to watch race against each other, who would you pick?

Clark and Senna.

Q: If you were a team boss, which current driver would you pick first for your team (excluding yourself and your current team mate)?

Fernando Alonso.

Q: Just 19 of the world’s motor racing circuits feature on the current F1 calendar. You can add one more. Which circuit do you pick and why?

I’d say Imola if it weren’t in Italy, because they don’t need two Grands Prix. But actually, Imola would probably still be my first pick!

Q: You are having a dinner party and can invite four people from the world of motorsport, past or present. Who do you invite?

Clark, Damon Hill, Brabham, and my uncle Rob. :P

Q: You are given the chance to drive any legendary Formula One car of the past (excluding those made by your own team). Which car would you choose?

Ferrari 641. Prettiest F1 car ever, and hopefully I’d be able to stroke its curves as I stepped in and out of it… ahem.

Q: Rooftop swimming pool, bowling alley, revolving sushi bar – just some of the features most F1 motorhomes don’t possess. If you could add one thing to your team’s motorhome, what would it be?

A barbecue for throwing shrimps onto.

Q: Imagine you have just won the world title. Where would you go for your celebratory meal and what would choose from the menu?

Q: You must choose a city for a new Formula One street circuit – which city, anywhere in the world, do you choose, and why?

New York. Formula One is still very underexposed in North America even with Austin coming next year, just think it would be awesome racing round the Big Apple, might capture the public’s imagination a bit more.

Q: If you could choose one former world champion as your team mate, who would you choose and why?

I was tempted to go for Sir Jackie too, absolute motor racing legend but I think I would pick Niki Lauda. He was a special driver, maximised every aspect of his talent to the full and his racecraft was in my opinion up there with Prost’s as the best of all time. He would be an excellent driver to learn from.

Q: Formula One innovations of the past – ground effect, active suspension, turbocharging, six wheels, the list goes on. If you could bring back one past innovation, what would it be and why?

Bigger engines and smaller wings! Definitely would decrease the amount of aero grip available if I had my way.

Q: What innovations would you like to see in the future?

KERS has been a good innovation, and they should continue looking at renewable technologies. Ground affects looks a no go, but if I were in charge DRS would be banished forever!

Q: You can only drive at one circuit for the rest of your life – which circuit, past or present from anywhere in the world, do you choose?

Suzuka. Technically demanding, super fast and the amount of history about the place due to title deciders make it a special circuit. Silverstone in its old configuration second.

Q: Maserati, Alfa Romeo, Tyrrell, March are just some of the teams that have departed the sport. Which former team would you most liked to have raced with and why?

Can I say Lotus in their heyday? I know they’re on the grid now but its not the same. Perfect racing philosophy.

Q: You have to design a new F1 circuit, combining all your favourite corners from other tracks around the world. Which three corners are top of your list and why?

1) 130R – Suzuka. It’s still amazing although they can now take it flat.

2) Maggots/Becketts complex – Silverstone. Watching cars go through there in full flight must be unbelievable, incredible direction change.

3) Tamburello – Imola. Must have been absolutely terrifying in the 80’s and 90’s with less grip. Proper corner.

Q: You can travel back in time and compete in any decade of Formula One racing, from the 1950s to the 1990s. Which decade would you choose and why?

1980’s I think. Cars were ridiculously powerful, less aero grip and incredibly deep field of talented drivers. Like to think I could hold my own!

Q: If you could pick two Formula One greats of the past (from different eras) to watch race against each other, who would you pick?

Michael Schumacher vs Ayrton Senna. Senna’s era was ending as Schumacher’s was starting so I’m having this on a technicality. Personally I think Jim Clark is the greatest driver of all time but this would be the greatest matchup. As team manager I would stipulate no team orders and equal machinery for both, wonder how Michael would react against such a fast teammate. And whether Michael would push Senna as much as Prost did.

Q: If you were a team boss, which current driver would you pick first for your team (excluding yourself and your current team mate)?

Lewis Hamilton. Give him a good car on a par with the others in the field and he is the best driver out there in my opinion (over Vettel.) He’s also not frightened of a competitive teammate like Alonso is so the team could compete for the WCC.

Q: Just 19 of the world’s motor racing circuits feature on the current F1 calendar. You can add one more. Which circuit do you pick and why?

I want Imola back. Or old school Hockenheim before they sanitised it into its current pale imitation.

Q: You are having a dinner party and can invite four people from the world of motorsport, past or present. Who do you invite?

Ayrton Senna

Niki Lauda

Jackie Stewart

James Hunt

Q: You are given the chance to drive any legendary Formula One car of the past (excluding those made by your own team). Which car would you choose?

JPS Lotus ’79 from 1978.

Q: Rooftop swimming pool, bowling alley, revolving sushi bar – just some of the features most F1 motorhomes don’t possess. If you could add one thing to your team’s motorhome, what would it be?

Adrian Newey.

Q: Imagine you have just won the world title. Where would you go for your celebratory meal and what would choose from the menu?

No idea, not really the partying type. Probably just hit the local Wetherspoons and take it from there!

Q: You must choose a city for a new Formula One street circuit – which city, anywhere in the world, do you choose, and why?

Vienna. I love the architecture and the wintery air of romance the place has.

Q: If you could choose one former world champion as your team mate, who would you choose and why?

Damon Hill, as I reckon he’d be the easiest to beat.

Q: Formula One innovations of the past – ground effect, active suspension, turbocharging, six wheels, the list goes on. If you could bring back one past innovation, what would it be and why?

Bigger engines V10’s and V12’s, maybe even V16’s. The engine is the most important part of the car to me – after all, it is called motorsport and as impressive as the current engines are, they aren’t exciting.

Q: What innovations would you like to see in the future?

More efficient aerodynamics. All the downforce with none of the wake…which I guess is ground effect!

Q: You can only drive at one circuit for the rest of your life – which circuit, past or present from anywhere in the world, do you choose?

Monza. I’d never tire of it.

Q: Maserati, Alfa Romeo, Tyrrell, March are just some of the teams that have departed the sport. Which former team would you most liked to have raced with and why?

Alfa Romeo of course! For the same reasons as Steph gave. All of the good stuff about Ferrari but far less of the negatives!

Q: You have to design a new F1 circuit, combining all your favourite corners from other tracks around the world. Which three corners are top of your list and why?

Parabolica and Stowe are both brilliant corners – down a couple of gears, fling the car in and hope it sticks. I’d also have Tarzanbocht from the Zandvoort circuit, as it’s probably one of the best overtaking cornere there’s ever been.

Q: You can travel back in time and compete in any decade of Formula One racing, from the 1950s to the 1990s. Which decade would you choose and why?

The 1970’s. Lots of innovation, crazy looking cars, big fat tyres, and the last era featuring some of the proper ‘widowmaker’ tracks.

Q: If you could pick two Formula One greats of the past (from different eras) to watch race against each other, who would you pick?

Taki Inoue and Yuji Ide. With Yakety Sax playing in the background.

Q: If you were a team boss, which current driver would you pick first for your team (excluding yourself and your current team mate)?

Fernando Alonso. He can do it all on the track, he can motivate and lead a team and he’s a generally all round intelligent bloke.

Q: Just 19 of the world’s motor racing circuits feature on the current F1 calendar. You can add one more. Which circuit do you pick and why?

Imola. I miss it. Even though it’ full of chicane’s, they’re challenging chicanes, and Acqua Minerale is a wonderful corner.

Q: You are having a dinner party and can invite four people from the world of motorsport, past or present. Who do you invite?

Murray Walker, Graham Hill, Fernando Alonso and Jarno Trulli.

Q: You are given the chance to drive any legendary Formula One car of the past (excluding those made by your own team). Which car would you choose?

Alfa Romeo 159. Front Engine, rear wheel drive, skinny tyres, no aero, just loads of power and your own talent to master.

Q: Rooftop swimming pool, bowling alley, revolving sushi bar – just some of the features most F1 motorhomes don’t possess. If you could add one thing to your team’s motorhome, what would it be?

A wine and cheese cellar

Q: Imagine you have just won the world title. Where would you go for your celebratory meal and what would choose from the menu?

I’d go to a great little pub down in Cornwall with my Dad and sit there sampling ales and ciders all afternoon before going home to my Mum’s roast dinner.

Q: You must choose a city for a new Formula One street circuit – which city, anywhere in the world, do you choose, and why?

Munich. It’s my favourite city in the world, it has a good mix of Bavarian culture and pop culture; it’s old and modern at the same time. Both English Garden and the Old Town would be great places.

Q: If you could choose one former world champion as your team mate, who would you choose and why?

Kimi Raikkonen. I’m not a fan of him but I think that our characters would fit together.

Q: Formula One innovations of the past – ground effect, active suspension, turbocharging, six wheels, the list goes on. If you could bring back one past innovation, what would it be and why?

Don’t know about the innovations but I would like to make cars more fragile, I mean, to have a higher chance of seeing them retiring from races because of technical problems. I believe this would make the races more exciting and give backmarkers more chances to finish in high places.

Q: What innovations would you like to see in the future?

I would like to get rid of DRS and maybe some more button-related things and change the look of the cars so that they look more beautiful.

Q: You can only drive at one circuit for the rest of your life – which circuit, past or present from anywhere in the world, do you choose?

Most probably Spa.

Q: Maserati, Alfa Romeo, Tyrrell, March are just some of the teams that have departed the sport. Which former team would you most liked to have raced with and why?

My choice would be some cool backmarkers like Minardi; if possible, then in the 2001 & 2002 seasons together with Alex Yoong. I think we would have had terribly bad results and lots of fun.

Q: You have to design a new F1 circuit, combining all your favourite corners from other tracks around the world. Which three corners are top of your list and why?

Eau Rouge because it is simply great. Singapore Sling because it is very tricky. Chicane (the corner right after the tunnel in Monaco) because it is probably the first one that would come to my mind if I was asked to name just one corner in F1 (don’t know why).

Q: You can travel back in time and compete in any decade of Formula One racing, from the 1950s to the 1990s. Which decade would you choose and why?

1990s, that was the time when I started watching F1 and I have very nice memories from that time.

Q: If you could pick two Formula One greats of the past (from different eras) to watch race against each other, who would you pick?

I think a rivalry between Mika Hakkinen and Ayrton Senna would be interesting to watch as they have/had very different personalities.

Q: If you were a team boss, which current driver would you pick first for your team (excluding yourself and your current team mate)?

Heikki Kovalainen. I really believe he is capable of winning world championships and it would be great to prove the world that even the really nice guys can win.

Q: Just 19 of the world’s motor racing circuits feature on the current F1 calendar. You can add one more. Which circuit do you pick and why?

Q: You must choose a city for a new Formula One street circuit – which city, anywhere in the world, do you choose, and why?

Blackpool under illuminations – The beach, the lights, the tower, I reckon it would look beautiful

Q: If you could choose one former world champion as your team mate, who would you choose and why?

Kimi Raikkonen – Just shut up and drive – That’s what I love about him

Q: Formula One innovations of the past – ground effect, active suspension, turbocharging, six wheels, the list goes on. If you could bring back one past innovation, what would it be and why?

V10 engines or the Ferrari V12 from 1995 – The noise those engines made were just pure sex.

Q: What innovations would you like to see in the future?

Difficult to think of own innovations ;) Actually, would love it if someone invented a way to race in standing water, thicker treaded tyres and a way to see past the spray… that way, we wouldn’t have situations of fannying about behind the safety car for umpteen laps.

Q: You can only drive at one circuit for the rest of your life – which circuit, past or present from anywhere in the world, do you choose?

Bathurst – Australia. Spectacular scenery and spectacular circuit

Q: Maserati, Alfa Romeo, Tyrrell, March are just some of the teams that have departed the sport. Which former team would you most liked to have raced with and why?

Brabham – Legendary team

Q: You have to design a new F1 circuit, combining all your favourite corners from other tracks around the world. Which three corners are top of your list and why?

Eau Rouge (Spa) – No matter how much tarmac run off they use there, it will always look awesome

Q: You can only drive at one circuit for the rest of your life – which circuit, past or present from anywhere in the world, do you choose?

Mount Panorama at Bathurst. It’s not in F1 and never has been but I have raced there on games such as Race Driver Grid and others. It’s a great track to drive around. I suppose I could be called biased because it’s Australian… but really I love the track. I also really enjoyed Spa and the Nurburgring F1 track.

Q: Maserati, Alfa Romeo, Tyrrell, March are just some of the teams that have departed the sport. Which former team would you most liked to have raced with and why?

Brabham.

Q: You have to design a new F1 circuit, combining all your favourite corners from other tracks around the world. Which three corners are top of your list and why?

Bianchimont at Spa, the Esses at Bathurst, Michelin curve at Nurburgring.

Q: You can travel back in time and compete in any decade of Formula One racing, from the 1950s to the 1990s. Which decade would you choose and why?

Late 80’s, early 90’s. Perhaps even the 60’s.

Q: If you could pick two Formula One greats of the past (from different eras) to watch race against each other, who would you pick?

Jack Brabham and Alain Prost.

Q: If you were a team boss, which current driver would you pick first for your team (excluding yourself and your current team mate)?

There’s alot. Personally, as in who I would rather; defiently Mark Webber. However I think I would pick Fernando Alonso.

Q: Just 19 of the world’s motor racing circuits feature on the current F1 calendar. You can add one more. Which circuit do you pick and why?

Bathurst!!! Make it the new Aussie Grand Prix. It has real character. Anyone who hasn’t seen a lap, race there need to have a look. The esses going steep down the mountain are amazing.

Q: You are having a dinner party and can invite four people from the world of motorsport, past or present. Who do you invite?

Mark Webber, Mika Hakkinen, Gilles Villneuve, Peter Brock.

Q: You are given the chance to drive any legendary Formula One car of the past (excluding those made by your own team). Which car would you choose?

The 1950 Alfa Romeo. Yep.

Q: Rooftop swimming pool, bowling alley, revolving sushi bar – just some of the features most F1 motorhomes don’t possess. If you could add one thing to your team’s motorhome, what would it be?

A…. zero gravity chamber. I think that would be awesome.

Q: Imagine you have just won the world title. Where would you go for your celebratory meal and what would choose from the menu?

Q: You must choose a city for a new Formula One street circuit – which city, anywhere in the world, do you choose, and why?

Oooh, that’s a hard one. I’d probably go for Moscow, Pretoria or Buenos Aires. I think Russia, South Africa and South America are all important places for Formula 1 to operate in.

Q: If you could choose one former world champion as your team mate, who would you choose and why?

I can’t decide between Mika Hakkinen and Juan Manuel Fangio. Hakkinen was the only man Michael Schumacher was ever itnimidated by, so he had to be doing something right. And I’d take Fangio because he did everything Senna and Prost and Schumacher did … three decades earlier.

Q: Formula One innovations of the past – ground effect, active suspension, turbocharging, six wheels, the list goes on. If you could bring back one past innovation, what would it be and why?

I wouldn’t add an innovation, I’d take one away: aerodynamics. I’d seriously re-write the regulations so that there would be as little aerodynamic grip as possible.

Q: What innovations would you like to see in the future?

I’d like to see a broadcast system where the viewer could choose which camera angles they view. There are over 200 cameras at a Grand Prix weekend, and we only use one of them at any given time.

I’d also like to see KERS and the DRS used strategically. For example, if a driver does not use his KERS on one lap, then he gets a double charge on the next. Or, if he is within one second of the car in front at the start of a new lap, he gets use of the DRS for the rest of the lap.

Q: You can only drive at one circuit for the rest of your life – which circuit, past or present from anywhere in the world, do you choose?

Interlagos. Both the current and original versions. It’s an absolutely fantastic circuit, especially once you get a rhythm going.

Q: Maserati, Alfa Romeo, Tyrrell, March are just some of the teams that have departed the sport. Which former team would you most liked to have raced with and why?

Andrea Moda. For the lulz.

Q: You have to design a new F1 circuit, combining all your favourite corners from other tracks around the world. Which three corners are top of your list and why?

1) Decida do Lago at Interlagos. It’s a high-speed double-apex bend where you have to get the braking just right; you can’t take the corner at full speed, so if you slow down too much, you’ll lose time.

2) Tabac at Monaco. It’s fast, it’s narrow and there is absolutely no room for error. And just as you get to the exit, you need to set yourself up for the first half of the chicane.

3) Turns 7-10 in Korea. Similarly fast and flowing, but then if drops you into a tightish right. The braking zone is downhill, so you really need to concentrate to get it right every time.

Q: You can travel back in time and compete in any decade of Formula One racing, from the 1950s to the 1990s. Which decade would you choose and why?</strong

Probably the 1980s, when everything just got sillier and sillier by the season. 1986 – my birth year – was a highlight.

Q: If you could pick two Formula One greats of the past (from different eras) to watch race against each other, who would you pick?

Hakkinen and Fangio, for the same reasons I gave above.

Q: If you were a team boss, which current driver would you pick first for your team (excluding yourself and your current team mate)?

Jenson Button. I think he’s one of the smartest – if not the smartest – drivers on the grid.

Q: Just 19 of the world’s motor racing circuits feature on the current F1 calendar. You can add one more. Which circuit do you pick and why?

The old Interlagos.

Q: You are having a dinner party and can invite four people from the world of motorsport, past or present. Who do you invite?

Danica Patrick, Simona de Silvestro, Ana Beatriz and Pippa Mann.

Q: You are given the chance to drive any legendary Formula One car of the past (excluding those made by your own team). Which car would you choose?

This one’s easy: the Lotus 49C, hands down.

Q: Rooftop swimming pool, bowling alley, revolving sushi bar – just some of the features most F1 motorhomes don’t possess. If you could add one thing to your team’s motorhome, what would it be?

Q-Branch from the Bond films.

Q: Imagine you have just won the world title. Where would you go for your celebratory meal and what would choose from the menu?